Gleaner_19701023_5

NAZAAETJ.I COLLEGE OF AOCNESTER ..
Coffee Hour
nswers 8t Questions
rosa nne costa
those students parUCIPBt•ng '" continuing
Sister barbara
of contmuing education. organized the event to provide the
1
An tnformal question and answer penod covered such top1cs as
studyu>g. and general onlormatoon Students should seek
when needed. from their departmenl head Of from saster
book how to stucly in college IS QUill belpful lor those
... 'II Clolhculty studyong and wnung term papers
reasons we"' goven by tt>e women as to why tl>ey decoded
the1r education after a lapse of ume even though reponStb•htle$
obhgat1ons had but It up Ann Oemocker. mother of Stx and a
student. stated that her goal IS to help d•sturbed and retarded
who can not read Her own son suffers hom dyslexta.
jnformation bulletin board for the continuing educa tion
wi ll be going up soon ou tside of sister barbara's office
us on Pi Gamma Mu
pat willlama
ts bemg apphed to her
fordham university m
city. In a letter to pi
the past president
other members to
scholarship.
mu tS the national
society of soesal sciences.
ed 10 each chapter are
htSIOfY poht1cal le180C. SOCIOlogy
end econotrues maJOfS who have
m&1n111ned at least a B average.
The moderetor of nazareth·s
chapter IS dr. mary bush On our
campus. thiS orgamzauon has
sponsored speakers who are
concerned w i th the soc1al
sciences. tn an a ttempt to
encourage interest and study in
these loelds Recently. po gamrnu
mu parhCIP&ted tn the u n, day at
nazareth's art center
Who's Who
Honors
Students
A number or students have
been selected lor membershop in
the organization of who's who m
american colleges and
univerSities Although standards
for selection vary from school to
school there are four bas1c
requ~remen ts for membersh1p·
character. scholarship leadershtp
10 extracurriCUlar activit•es. and
posS~blliry or future usefulness to
business and to SOClOty
The lollowrng students have
been selected from nazareth
coHege
Mnior•
ann callaghan
kathy chrostopher
kathleen c1ma
marye e.rane
theresa deforrest
salley dylewskl
barbara gonzalez
margaret hammond
catherine herman
marilyn kndnck
shirley Iapiana
melinda marley
Joanne rao
martha nley
eltzabeth slayne
elrzabeth S4111eau
angela :zammlt
junior•
lois blowers
mary beth farrel
mary ann harlnen
iacquehne robot11
christine russo
President Names
Department Head
One ol New YCl<k State·s foremost educatcn has been named the
first full��ttme DIItetOf of cont1nu1ng educauon of nazatelh college of
rochester.
The appotntment of m1ss ahce I foley. PfesentJy assistant
supermtendent fOf 1nstruct1on and pup1l serVIces. bnghton oentrel
schools. was announced yesterday by stster helen malone, president of
nazareth college M1ss fotey. past pr8stdent of lhe new york state
teachers assoctauon, w1ll assume her new duties july 1. 197 1. after
concluding 36 years o f MrVICt 1n the bughton schools.
S1ster barbara ann, cha~rman of the mathematics department. has
been servmg U'l a part· time capacuy as head of the program since the
begmmng of thts academ•c year Under her direction, twice as many
evemng and sarurday courses are now be1ng offered as tast year and
enrollment has S41bstant•ally oncreased to 195 part·t•m• ...s 25 full·
time students.
A 541mma cum laude graduate of nazareth college. lliiSS loley
rece•ved her m a 11 the un1vera.ty of rochester and a\10 pursued
graduate studtes at fOfdh.lm. the unwersrry of Wlsconsm and cotumb11
un••ersily Naureth conlerrad uoon her the hone><ary degree a1 rloc:tor
of letters on 1 960 and she presently serves as secretary of the ccl!o9e·s
board of trustees.
Residence Council News
by ulon1u ll.ullu1
Since 1 last wrote for the
gleaner residence coonc11 met
three nmes. The s.gn1fu:ant events
of the meet~ngs tnclud e
sophomore curtew proposal.
doSCUS$10<1 wrth mr pohl. head of
secunty, and di$CUSSion on council
re·organ1zat•on
The meeung With mr pohl was
an 1nforma11on. question and
answer type meeung, Mr pohl
informed us of the hours o f
coverage and the number of
guards employed There ere five
full ume guards and two part·Ume
ones employed There os all day
coverage on saturday and sunday
and on monday through lndey tt>e
coverage extends from 6 00 p m
to 6.00 am Tt>ere are always two
guards on duty one 1n the deotm
complex and the other 1n the
patrol car.
The mam secunty tS located 1n
kearney The rad1o IS there as •s
the guard station Mrs
champagne can usually be callod
10 case of emergency. There Is
also a rad1o 1n the faculty house
and the ans oemer
Our next mee t ing was
highlighted by the onouaung ol
action on the SOPhomore curfew
friday novombe<13
proposal. But. before thiS was
undertaken regular buSiness was
teken care of.
Wu\9 rep elecuons '" ell the
permanent hous1ng has been
undertaken. Hopefulty. an acuve
charn of commun•cat•ons Will be
started 10 che d<Hms themselves
It was reported that no ttouble
occurred in open house procedure
lthank·you girls) . Frre dri ll
procedure was gone over and tho
importance o f knowing the
whereabou ts and operation of the
ftre extmguishers was stressed
Comminee reports were made
The dorm acttVJties commtttee hes
Slarted actton along w1th fisher's
counal on the sour hour The food
commouee had just been for-med
and met wnh mr mcgreg<H Meny
worthwhile efforts were made by
both the committee members and
mr. mcg,egor to VOtce OPiniOns
and to get honesl answers to the
quesltons raised The parietal
committee sent out fotms to 35
colleges. hke nazareth. co get first·
hand opinions and comments on
then stvstems. A Questionnaire
> 5
F,.ohman midterm grade reporu will be mailed by friday.
november 13.
friday november 20
Laat day to withdraw from a courM without grade .. F ...
thruaday november 19
friday november 20
Thankagivlr>g examo. Conault official bulletin boardl for tlmaa
androomo.
tueaday november 24
Thankaglvir>g receaa baglno alter laat class and laborate><y.
Residence ha lla clooe at 6 p.m.
gleaner 2
Editorial:
When the wrihng or an edltortal becomes a burden one ean enher put
the bleme on a lack of enthusaasm or eommumty se>tnt on the part of the
edttOf or posSibly one coukS look even further to the subject mauer
whtch should be ""ed•tortahzed" upon. The fut•hty of putting one's
observations on the line could also add to the editorial burden. yet one
must forge on - or so I am told
If we could nol cast our minds back to the first editOfial of thtS
academtc year. i asked that we an take cogntzanee of 1he system of a
untversuy· type atmosphere modeled on newman's d•seotuse. the theme
of whteh centered around a total concern for the dtscovery and
eoncomttant culbvauon of truth
In vtew of this may , ask now wtth a ttnge o f ' natve tnnoeence' what
possesses more truth ahan the human body? Whether it be •n the
contex t of biology or art It Still comes out the same and our merely
mov1ng It from places of VI SO a I prominence will fell to change iL
FO< you see rllar os rile real beaury or 1ru1h - it may be our or Sigh!
but H sullas not out of mtnd
kmd
THE PROBlEM OF REBElliON
There is somerhing abourbeong a rebel during rhe 1970's thar doesn'r
lit The momenr you decide 10 chu ck !he old order and starrro rhink and
act on your own. you are not on your own Instead you are a member of
!hal large auronomous group known as !he rebels. Regardless ol
whether you QUI! !he OSiabhshmen! bec.ause Ol a deeprOOied halted Ol
apple poe. Of agnew. the dral~ Of bog lamohes you are ommedoately typed
rebel - by rhose mySteiiOUS beongs who do such categonzong - and
forced to enter the rebel mold. You who wtshed to do your own
thinktng, are presentod with a set of slogans to mouth - it doesn' t
mauer 1f vou agree with them. so long as you should them loudly
enough - and geslures 10 wave. and hairstyles ro lollow. And you 'd
better shape-m fast. blend tn with all the other rebels. or you are 10
.uouble If chey ccnch you not shOuting enougn, or watching tne wrong
televJStOn shows - or wo..-se yet readtng a non·reQuned book. you are
labeled reactionary and tucked on your private arse back to the
establishment And even there. tdeahsm bleodtng in an mfinte vanetv of
places, you are labeled oven more and forced to conform,
Strange isn't it? You can't even rebel. but you are part of someone
else's rebellion. Thos seems 10 be an age that condemns !he ondovodual
1nd fOf'ces conform1ng; even tn that once sacred bastion of the: different
and the Odd - rebelloon As Tom Woll so nghdy stated in hos electric
kool-<>id acid t est. "You are enher on !he bus Of off the bus.' Isn't It a
pity there are so few buses left for us to choose from
The Green Phan tom
Letters
to the
editor:
Dear ed1tor.
Has anyone noticed the
dlscrepanc1es over admJOtStrat•ve
polocoes lately. the lack or
c~rauon and red taoe creating
a never end1ng battle bt\ween
concerned. alarmed, and at ttmes
even hosnle students and people
' lighten up?' Whenever the
quesuons of outmoded traditions,
residant ltvtng and commuters
r1ghts and needs. academ1c
IrrelevanCieS. the: assumption of
1nd1V1dual respons.belttees. conuol
of power. etc .• etc etc . are
ra1sed. thts 1s unavoidably obv1ous
Would it. perhaps. be more
accurate to refer to nazareth
college as naureth academy
State II?
Let me ask one quesuon If
nazateth as an 1nsutunon of hagher
leerntng and we are maturtng
young women. then why 11 the
I'IV4t01tll JUtirut1A ,_, n"7"'"'h nnr
hoki so flfmty to their authontatiVe
roles rtther than try to work
together wnh students for a
grourer end? Do you . the
adm101Sttat1on. honestly behave
that blond lanh and obedoence woll
wO<k in our present day society?
Isn't respect something earned
and 1s tt thlt there ts in.secuuty 1n
th•s reehzatlon And if 1h1s bhnd
obed•ence 11 work1ng at Nazareth
and we aren't quest•onang 1ts
dependaboloty then c.an there be
something wrong? Why don' t we
rally lor peece anymore. why
when 1 look around on my classes
do' see a sea or bowed heads and
frantiC pens rather than a
sttmulaung. surreng. vatuabl•.
communecatJve diseuss.onl And
why are so many unhappy w1th
Nazareth more so than ever
before 1 Am 1 too concerned WIth
the 1o111 atmosphere. tho
suffoceong apathy pervadong rhe
campus would 11 be w.ser to bury
my nose '" my books and IQnOfl
the suuetton for my rematneng
'stay• or should 1 transfer? That
moghl be an easy way out but
maybe 1 would find the same
there. But i have ex:pertenced
places. even campuses where
m1nds are worktng. emotions ere
generating and tdeallsm •s
mataoahzmg. and • know that
there 1S 1 chance for us. there has
tn """ If wa nut nff rnnr~trn nvar
gleaner
editor-in-chief
kathleen m dwyer
managing editor
mane bellomo
feature editor
elaone mileo
news editor
patrioe pallone
arts center editor
annmarie vorrasi
copy editor
mary kober
lay-out editor
kathleen wilhs
business editor
ginny sposato
•• •
bonnie meath
sue pis till I
elaine keller
dolores Iessard
moira cullen
kathy toomb
bobbie englert
pllula covock
rosa nne costa
rinky-dink. iny·bony school. And il
we can't reach each other at
nazareth (1250 or so) then what
can we do with a world (3 billion)?
A student's responSibility is to
buold himsell IO< !he lutuoe bur il
th1s concerns only our
' tntelhgence· then what wall
automatiion do to us? Isn't that
human element what w ill be
needed to preserve man? Are we
concerned with thtngs around us
now and preparing for a better
world. or are we trying to adapt to
the world now 1 nd what we
expect of the future with the
notton that man w1ll never
change? I surely hape this tsn·t so
because i would hke to give more
credh than th•s to man.
When well d1sagreements on
1deas no longer be cons1dered
personal attecksJ lf we are
concerned w11h the search for
truth and our mental and moral
growth then perhaps we need to
rea rrang e our prtoritses
(something we heard about last
spung}. ldeahsm may saturate a
grear many young hopes but bear
tn mtnd the h1ererchal pyramsd
now extsong at natareth and aust
emagme sf our reach for abstract
heoghts permeated and comboned
wtth this stone structure. And can
such an anclquated establishment
really be effecnve at this time
especia ll y wtth an uneasy
foundation to beg1n wath1 Please.
srude:nts. faculty, admmistrauon.
offer your rephes Let others know
where you stand, where we stand.
Sincerelv
(
I
Equality- Now?
e dltor ' a not e ; Be It known
t hroughou t t h e nazareth
commu nity that the apinlona
a n d at a tementa In m la a
rom er ' a c olumn do not
nec .... rily reflect thoM of t he
e dltor e. Comment on thle
reguler column is Invited end
encouraged.
barbara romer
When a femmist 1S 1nterv1ewed
by one ol the big buSiness press
syndiCIIIS. little attentiOn 1$
usually paid 10 rhe movement's
goals or mood. The personality·
onented press prefers to
desogna te a celebroty
'spohswomen' and. ohen deSPot&
her protests. presents the
•nd1v1dual ' s veews as
representatiVe of the mood of
millions of feminists and theH
sympathizers. Needless to say.
our movement is disparate and
often even divided We do.
however. share a fem1n1st pomt of
v••w. and agree on 0\.lr d•m•nd•
The means of tmplementtng them
poovodes the baSis IO< the r1nge
between the conservati ve
legislatove approach ol n.o. w
(nationa l organization of women)
and the Ingenious satulcal
guerrtlla thea tre of W.1 t c.h
(women��s international teHOitSt
conSPoriCV lrom hell.
What are these demands? One
1S for eommuntty-conuolled 24·
hour daycare centers Mothers
real/to that young children benefit
from the compantonsh1p of
children rheor own age. and rhat
1he ' trapped' sttuauon most
mothen expeuence 11 often
demandong lo all memberS ol the
lamoly Any reader who has SPent
but ono afternoon wnh a couple of
3 ·yeao-olds will testily 10 the
Incredible demands o f
constructiVely channeling theu
energy end to the short temper
and mental detenOfahon vm.ch
can reS4.11t from be1ng ltmued to
conversat•ons wnh ttny m1nds for
hours and days Yet responsoblo
mothers hesttate to leave 1helr
ch•ldren·s sociahzat10n In 'Just any'
hands Women's ltberetton
demands the establishment of 24·
hour doycare centers CO<lllolled
by the chtkjren·s own commun1ty
and sralled by both men and
women.
Women's flberatton also
supports the call of m1lltons of
women for free aboruon on
demond Aborroon should be
v1ewed • as a woman's most
personel deas.on a deCISion to
avert the buth of a chtfd
ece1dentally conceived through an
act of love. The state must not
have f1na1 say in a woman's choice
Our present laws. m most suues.
force a woman to have a ch1ld she
has been unable to prevent Then.
as 1f that's not enough. the state
refuses to accept reSPonsebellty fOf'
ttS law and instead forces th1s
absence of dav·care mag
this 1njust1ce wtueh IS so
lelt by !he poor. who may
the women·s 1nadequate 1
to survave
The most lragoc aSI)ott of
abortion issue. however, 1$
plaon lact !hal women who
rhay do not want !his cloild
continue to ftnd ways to get
tt Each legesleuve heanl'lg
abort1on reveals dramat
some of the common methodl
inducing abortiOn, well·know.:
poor women who've never
able 10 pay !he black·markel
Yet the PIOUS pohtieians.
heard about the oce·pu:l<s an:!
coathangers women have
ento themse lves tn t
desperation to be free of
growth 1ns1de them: havt~
testimony on the number•
women pathetocally bulcheoeol
the black-market abort1
haVIng heard women teStify
the devoatot•nv cxperienCit
being IO<Qed to bear a chold
n ever wanted. these n
polit1ctans conunue. '" thetr
rectitude, to allow the slaugh
our sisters by refu sing to
them access to safe. I
abonion We demend
our boc:hes
A thord demlnd ol !he
liber-atton movement 1s the
all sex d1seominauon.
Feminists don't believe 1
woman's possession of a u
has anyrhlng to do woth
mental eapacrty. or th1
especially quahf1es her to
dishes or to change d11
Biology •s not destmy. Our
society enforces the transrru
of stereotypical sex roles: it It
intention to elim.nate the111
every level We w1ll encou
mothers to re ·examine the
styles they present to the•
and daughters !daughters
nurse or teacher - some
' motherly'; sons play doctor
explorer - always
breadwlnned We will de
that htgh·schools eltmmatt
sex1sm they perpetuate tn
eareer ahernauves toward
they darect boys and gtrls, a:
the sex d•v•s.ons of 'home ec
'shop' We expect our husba
equally share housew
recogn1z1ng that they are
'hefpeng· us 1n ·our 1ob·. but r1
as our beloved roomates. thfr
accepttng theu half of
ob~ga uon IO< the mess •
'unconse•ous sextsm
November's p•ychology I
encoyrage you. aga1n. to get
accurate information abou~
movement as well as a fam·
wsth the radeeal femm1st
vtew by subscrabtng to oH
bocks. box 4859 cleveland
statton, wash•ngton. d.c 2
3
Art Center
Slates
Philippine Dancers
An eye-ravishing feas1 for the thanksgiving weekend will be the
thtl?e'""''ce of the bayanihan philippine dance company at nazareth arts
one performance on fnday. november 27 at 8:30p.m.
young and handsome native group of 27 dancers and 12
draw their. material from the tich folklore of the Islands.. The
strains are Indigenous tribal. arabic-malayan and
american. The company's repertory reflects this varied heritage.
program includes pOttrayals or primi tive religious rituals .
hunt. of festive joy and of thanksgiving: it progresses to the
versions of the wal tz. polka. jota. fandango and mazurka: it
the mayan fire and sword dances and the rousing and
tinikling, most famous and difficult of all philippine folk
dancers are petite,
young girls and well·
lting young men.
trained and perfectly
Painstaking research
in to every detail of
and the mi s.e · en ~scene .
that not only is the
production a vividly
rep r esentation of
ne culture. but
..., ,hU>ki~•olv beautiful. as well.
may find the exotic
of tropical i slands. the
verve of spani sh
erers. the ori enta l
~~~~,istication of the sloe: eyed
·~lldo··arabian fantasies and the sun·
splendor of ferti le land.
new sounds emanate
other native crafts and customs
h ave been p-ainsta k i ngl y
researched by the bayanihan folk
arts center using the staff and
facHities of the phil i ppine
women's university. The center
was created as a non·profit. civic
group with the dual purpose of
research and presentations.
Teams of students and teachers
were sent to all parts of the
coun try to tape · r ecord .
photograph and learn dances. to
collect authenttc costumes and
musical ins'truments and to bnng
all the research together into a
permanent collection. Female
dancers are students at the
university. Male dancers were
recruited from other universi ties
and from public life.
Bayanihan. a tagalog word
meaning an ancient custom of
working together. i s taken
seriously by the members of the
company. One man•festation of
'If
music
be
the
food
of
love
on;'
play
(Twelfth Night
Act 1: Scene I
the seriousness wjth which they
rake their work is the fact that
there are no stars and no star
billing in the company. All dancers
and musicians are listed equally in
all programs and playbills. The
standard answer to the question:
"who is the star or premiere
dancer& is 'bayanihan is the star.'
The bayanihan company. highly
acclaimed throughout the world.
performed before pres.ident nixon
when he recently visited president
and mrs . marcos i n t he
philippines. The highlight of their
current us tour will include a two~
week engagement at new york's
alice tu lly hall during the
christmas holidays.
Tickets for bayanihan philippine
dance company. priced at $5.00.
are on sale at the ar ts center
boxoffice. The boxoffice is open
weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m
Mail order mformation can be
obtained by calling 586·2420.
Audience Hails Fialka
Recently, an aging clown reured from the circus and was interviewed
on CBS Asked if hos profession differed g•ea tly from when he storied.
thO man shook h1s head sadly saying. 'Yes - no one laughs anym01e.
It's hard 10 make people laugh when they have problems:
Fialka. the brilliant Czech mime. incorporates such problems in a
whimsical. chaplinesque view of man vs. machine With the assistance
of his theatre of the balustrade. graduates of the prague school of
danes, fialka manages to conceive every absurd suuggle in which we
daily engage. with our pathetic notion of the convenience of
industrialization. No invention can alleviate our desperately lonely
condition No device in the depersonalized mdust11af society we live in
can arti culate that wodd of loneliness. So fialka and his players resort to
the gestures so universal in nature. Buttons won't button: ears won't
start. doors won't open. Fialka does not indict anyone to make social
comment. we aU share the blame and the resulting diseomfort.
Fialka relies on movement to demonstrate ingenuity and originality.
His technique is flawless. Moreover. his personality creates an empathy
that draws the audience to his revelations. His regard for the audience ..
as participants is always evident. He employs the familiar outside coat.
umbrella and mime make·up. bu t his troupers become cars. mach~nes
and revolving doors.
When marceau came to
nazareth. he described the
problem facing the mime dur to
the fact that the s1age in the arts
center has a personality of i ts own
that can take away from the total
effect But like marceau. fialka
over came that problem in his
dynamism and rappott.
And the audience in Rochester
paid F ial k a the highes t
compliment - they laughed.
Naz-Fisher
film series
Wednesday,
Nov. 18
HENRYV
lFisher B-J 35
" speaking powerfully o
I• • II a 1enat1on ...
(Sat. Review)
lngmar Bergman's
The Ritual
Arts Center
Film Series
Wed., Thurs., Sat.
Sun.
November 25, 26,
28, 29
8:00p.m.
gleaner
november 13, 1970
4 Emphasis
on
German
Culture.
Drama Club
presents Woyzeck
patrice pallone
T on•ght matks the open•ng of the nazareth - st. john fisher drama
club season m conjunction with the natareth thealre department. m a
performance or george buchners woyzeck. in the art centet auditorium.
As part or nazareth's focus on german culture. the production will be
repeated november 14, 15, 18 and 19 at 8: 15p.m. Following the,
november 18 performance, an onstage discussion will be held. with the
performers and production staff available to answer questions from the
audience.
This early nineteenth century tragedy depicts the life of a man whose
social circumstances eventua lly lead to his downfall. Woyzeck displays
the quest of a young man faced with the 1mages of man's beasttmess
and nature's cwelty. It has been called a ' p1cture of human suffering in
existenual tsolauon' and IS espectally modern m its psychology.
Accordmg to d~rector joseph
baranowskt, the main character.
wovzeck.. IS a pnmuive 'mcapable
of the sublettes '" ph1losophy and
science · As compared co
shakespeare·s 'othello: he can
only act He cannot 'think' or
rcuionaltte
In regard to general production
concep1s. tt should be noted that
the set emphasizes an 'organic
quality.' Since woyzeck must be
isola ted in a world apart he never
speaks directly to the audience.
Mr baranowski pointed ou t that in
planntng the product•on
nazareth's thrust stage presented
a definue problem m that it does
not permit a separate e n v~ron·
mont.'
The play tS taken from an actual
occurrance In l iepz.ig. when a
johann chriS t ian woyzock
murdered h1s m1stress. However.
at the t rtal woyzeck was
conSidered competent. and thus
executed. The quest10n of
woyzeck's responsibility for his
actions provides the background
for buchner's play
The large cast 1s headed by ric
peterson In the title role with Irene
Iamberti and teuy ging as marie
and 1hc drum major. rcspecnvely.
Work ing with arts cen ter
d•rector baranowski is technical
director william fletcher. also a
member of the theatre arts
faculty.
Tickets are ava1table at the
nazareth arts center box office
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. monday
through friday, Student tickets
may be secured upon presentation
WATCH
FOR
Student
Recitals
Coming
In
Nov.-Dec
Visit
gleaner
office-see
the
hanging
of
BOB
DYLAN
Eastman Slates
'War Requiem'
Sunday even•ng. november 15. at 8: 15 p.m. tn the eastman lhea•
the roch'ester oratorio soc1ety will inaugurate Its twenly·s•xth sea
with a performance of benjamin bntten's 'war requiem: Theodot
hoUenbach. founder and music director of 1he group. will condutt 11-.
composition which author atthur cohn has called ·an antiwar manifesa
of overwhelming power ·
Benjamin britten was born november 22. 19 13 in lowestoft. englarw!
In addiuon to his repuration as a composer of classical music. he is alt
known as a conductor and accompanist I c was he who conducted ~
first pe,.formance of the ·war HlQutem· may 30. 1962 at coventry E ·
le1nsdorf conducted the boston symphony orchestra •n the amerJCII
prem1ere july 27. 1963 at the tanglewood mus•c feStival.
\
Wrnten in celebrauon of the
consecration of the new st
m•chael's cathedral at coventry
(the original chu rch had been
destroyed during the second
world war}, the 'war requiem'
makes use not o n ly o f the
traditional 'missa pro defunctis'
used by palestralna. lassus.
victoria. mozart and verdi but also
of 9 of witfred owen's anti· war
poems. Owen was a poet serving
in the british Bfmy who was killed
one week before the end of the
f1tst world war.
The 'war requiem' calls for
soprano. tenor and baritone
soloi srs. mixed choru s. boys
chorus. and orchestra with an
expanded percusston section
including: tambourine. triangle.
cymbals. castenets. whip. chinese
blocks, gong. bells In c fi !·sharp.
vibraphon e. g lockenspiel and
antique cymbals.
Britten has said that it is the
duty of the composer ·to speak to
or for h•s fellow human be~ngs.'
Come suntiay and listen h e's
SPeaking to you.
We're you given
a piece of
white paper?
if you remember
or are curious
come to room
1 54 in the Arts
Centre nov. 19
at 1:30
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Civak reports:
day evening m medatlle
we held our first offJctalget
r especially arranged for
tshmen and sophomores for
rpose of famthanz•ng them
class and school
nattives and starttng off
ar's coffee hours and ge&
rSahead.
stmply beauttful voice of
peploe started o ff t ho
ng; she did a few of her
It folk selections and dod a
• thank you judy
uoductions followed .
mty affa•rs representatives
nd meg walters and hz
s. freshman reps hnda
y sophomore rep and chns
and jeann•e sauer juntor
representa tives. Miss d•ana
director of student ac11vi1ies
veral members of studont
11 were introduced and
to say a few words A
y doseussion followed from
whech • hope g•ves some
oon of future 'raps· whtCh
I should be held regularly
of counctl and community
" representat ives w ore
ed out together w • th a
onna ~re which we hoped
lead to dtscuss•ons among
s and opimons as well as
st1ons for what people
bke seen done
ld flke to emphasrze tho
nance of th ese
naires. being that coffee
hour talks. soc1a l events. ecc
should be relevant and we want to
bnng ou t issues wh1ch concern a
m8joroty of people. so please offer
suggesnons as to ava•lable (7)
1nformanve speakers. top•cs. and
arrangements h1me. place. etc I
Commun•catlon has been
slightly weak but os beong
remedied but we do need your
help in spreading the work. Please
offer suggestions and watch for
bulletins.
The united nauons heartng
which took plaoe october 26th In
the ans center audltonum was
cord•afly welcomed by a number
of our g•rls who donated the•r
servtees as pages. reg•strars. and
ushers Senator cooper and hts
committee members along with
miss edwina hogadono. dean of
r i t., and sister theresa w ere
grateful for a job well done Thank
you girls.
Halloween was a time for
parnes: the boys ond g~ls of the
rochester state hOSPital and
montgomery settlement house
jOined us for a festive get together
in kearney poplars loungs
A few more th•ngs - anyone
notice the super·enormous truck
outstde the back of kearney
saturday afternoon? It was mike
ryan and jimmy bm'\g1ng 1n some
clothes and furntture that naz and
f•sher students have been
collecting Now we lUSt need to
move rt all out to the m•grant
camps before they move me out
of nazareth!
gleaner calendar
event where
jethro tull war memorla18:30
woyzeck art center 8 15
sen1or recual a·134pm
Justrne casey
royal hp1uan horses war memonal8 30
muSic department a- 13
henry v fosher f>. 135
beethoven·vlohn lower aud 4 p m,
sonatas
' traffic' war memorool 8 30
grateful doad u ofr
travelogue art center 8 p m
Jefferson a~rplane mcc
up the downstairs fisher b-135 S 55
case
globetrotters warmemonal
rochester chamber art center 4 p m
orchestra
semor recital a-13
jimdekoma
phol bertrand
notse dame glee club wheatlon·chll• hs
S2508pm
bergman's utual art center 8 p m
ouess who war memOflll 8 30
The flfst sem•nar or the year
was held october I 6· 18 and was
.a fantast iC success. but the
sem•nar for last weekend was
cancelled I 3 boys and 4
girls. coma on g~rlsl I know we
had a lot of work to do. Next time.
Meoungs. poster·making,
chasing after c•der and donuts,
getung permiSSIOn dittoing.
wtalkeng have kept us
runnmg Here are a few th1ngs for
anyone Interested
Volunteer programs check the
bulle tons by the sandwoeh machone
and m smyth basement
Religious affaors lather
shannon 1s always eager f,or new
members f o r tho liturgy
commmee: have any bright ideas
for dorm masses eeumen•cal
and/ or ·new· serv•ees? (coffee
hours) contact cheresa m1ller.
kearney t east 01 me
Drug counseling sandy Ieboid
together w 1th members of
admmistrat1on and students are
organit1ng programs to run from
late november/ early december.
Sh e w i l l gladly ac c ept
suggestions. comments and help
from you so that tt will be
informative. realis tic. and
beneficral h w•ll be earned on
ttvough personal counseling as
well.
Personal counseling several
people have 1nformed me or
friends chat they would be more
than happy to counsel students on
personal problems of any kind.
Please feel free to speak with
sandy Ieboid. o ld o'connor;
roseanne ISabell. kearney; mr
kolb. of the theatre arts faculty.
arts center - downstans: peg
morgan. meda1lle and myself.
paula et'V1ok.
tllank you.
was alSo given to each dorm
studenl to get the student opinion
on the proposed system.
The next order of business was
the heshman·sophomore curfew
proposal beong submined lor 1101e
10 re-SJdent council It wes read to
the counc•l members and after
much debate the proposal was
accepted by resrdenoe couneol by
a vote of 10. 1 Before the
proposal can be submttted to
administrative counc1l a student
vote must be taken and a letter
must be sent to the parents for
approval
The next meet1ng began wuh a
treasurers repon that our treasury
now contaons S424 31
Mary betll farrell then gave a
report on the act•on tlken on the
curfew proposal She reporced
that the dtttos were run off for the
dorm meetings where vote Wtll be
taken
Commtttee reports were made
wuh no further achon in them
except che telev•~on commmee
headed by mary ann pratt She
mvesngated the costs of rentmg a
tv as proposed by m1ss Iauria
More 1nvestJgat.eon must be made
befote further actton can be taken.
Diseuss1on was made on the
formatJon of house governments.
M iss d•ana lauuo read examples of
how they wero set up at other
colleges. Further d1scussion will
be made at the next meetong Any
sugges11ons or comments are
wetcome -our meet•ngs are held
every monday at 6 30 p m on our
mP.daiiiP. hlll~m,.ant nff,,.•
EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
thursday, november 19, I 970
eco 405
HIS 401 (PSC 401)
MUS211
lhursday, november 19, 1970
MISS fake
mr mou1s
dr gruber
810 455 sr grace
BUS 457 moss fake
HIS 455 sr. ooleen
SPC 468 moss delvecclloo
thursday. november 19, 1970
MTH 417 sr. barbara ann
friday, november 20, 19'70
EOU 405 dr barraco
9:00a.m.
s 129
13
A 183
1:30p.m.
S206
S206
S219
A 183
7:00p.m.
A 186
9:00a.m.
A 13
Alcohol on Campus?
The undergrad assoerauon Is formeng a student comm1ttee 10
1nvest•gare the schoors sooal regulatiOn about alcohol on campus
Accordong to the student handbook " alcoholoc beverages may not be
consumed en -nd1v.dual resadence hall rooms. Only wnh the e;cpltett
permiSSion of che dean of students may elcohohc beverages be served
1n pubhc rooms of the res1dence halls or a1 soc1al gatherings elsewhere
on campus."
II you thonk this rule should be changed or just want to know why it's
there. here's your chance to do somoth1ng about it. Contact Ioyce
cafarello (carrot hall). rory finnerty (old o'connor 2 I 4). or your class reps.
Remember, the bestway to get eornothing done io to do it
yaurHif.
annette sleymon
Hnior dan rep
l A.O! ArAitTMfNT OEVfLOP­mvnt
has huge surplus of new
rug1 all 100 per ''"' nylon, f ull
sin 9.12. $24. 12•15, $39.
Gold, green, blue , red . Trt•
mtndo•a savings. Great for
apartment. Selling fvrniture,
con pu"how opar1ment or in.
dividvol pieces ot tremendous
savings. New. Selling e very­thing.
For Information please
call S~o~itland ManCM Apartments
Warthoun. 377·4 1 15, be tween
12·9p.m.
Library note:
chi che' pu yen,
yen che' pu chi.
- lao-Tz_e, Too-ten-king.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Oeterminea That
Cigarette Smoking is Oangarous to Your Health.
By Act of Congress. I he
above warning must be placed on all
cigareues manufactured for sale
in the United States on or after
November 1, 1970.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.
EOUCA TION. AND WELFARE
Pl.lbltc Ktt11ft Ser. ce
gleaner 6
november 13, 1970
Interview:
Security Head
Introduced
If the college community at Nazareth has sensed changes in the
faces. procedures and professional image of the security departmem
th1s fall. those changes can be attributed to a large extent to our new
director of security. mr. allan pohl.
Mr. pohl formerly managed the rochester office of pinkenon. inc. and
served as director of securhy at the university of rochester and strong
memorial hospital
The new nazareth security chief joined pinkerton·s security and
Investigative firm in 1964. After several promotions. he was appointed
head of the buffalo office investigation department and in july 1969
took charge of rochester area operations. His duties in the buffalo and
roches1er areas included overall responsibili ty for the security of several
colleges in new york and pennsylvania. including nazareth. On
september 10. he moved into his new office at nazarerh to assume fulf ..
ume responsibility for all security on the campus.
A narive of tonawanda. new york. mr. pohl received his bachelors
degree from the state university at buffalo where he also took graduate
studies. Before ioining pinkerton·s. he taught at a junior high school in
north tonawanda and was a radio-televi sion announcer in buffalo.
Allan Pohl
What are some of his thoughts
on security at natareth?
We have a community set-up
here at nazareth. ' explains mr.
pohf. ·The campus is a city unto
itself - i t has i ts own store.
dining areas. recreational facilities
and livtng Quarters. ConseQuently.
such an area must have its own
police force. Our men must be
capable of handling a diversity of
situations. Moreover. we must act
In a public relations capacity as
well. Daily visitors - salesmen,
VI Ps. pare"ts, delivery men,
officials - meet the security staff
before gaining any other
impression of the school. Our staff
must be able to relate to all forces
wtthin the community at
nazareth.'
Her e the intervtew was
interrupted. A semor w•th a stalled
car wondered rf anyone at the
security office had a jumper calbe
Mr. pohl dispatched one ol the
'guard. · We aren' t guarding
anyone here. Our function is
preventive security. Obviously. our
staff deals with problems that
arise. but we consider our main
function to be preventi ng
problems from developing.·
·we are making changes to
facilitate matters. Our staH mu~t
be Interchangeable. able to
perform a vanety of duties. We are
acQuiring a new patrol car and
equipment. We are changing the
shirts on the uniforms to a lighter.
more attractive color. Our men
attend uaining sessions on their
own rime in such areas as first~
aid. penal taw. self-defense and
public realtions.·
Such changes may seem minor.
But the person entering this very
open campus should realtze at
sight that he ,s dealing with a
competent staff.·
M r. pohl was asked hoV.:
students might assist the stall. He
........ ..; .......... 1 .. u ..... : ....................... : ....... .
Drug Use
Surveyed
High s.:hool students who have
seen their mothers Intoxicated
have a significant ly greater
tendency to be drug users than
those who have not.
Th1s is one of the conclusions
reached in a survey published in
octobe r 's sci en ce d igest
conducted by two po rt
washington. n.y .. high school
students among 1.416 of their
classmates.
The 47 Question comput er­aided
survey was made under
faculty supervision by james
valleman. 1 7. and theodore
lawrence, 18. seniors at schreiber
high s.:hool. port washington.
Specifically. the survey shows
that 44 per cent of the students
who had observed their mothers
under the inf luence of liQuor had
smoked marijuana three times or
more.
Only 27 per cent of those who
had never seen th eir mothers
drunk smoked marijuana three
times or more.
Of students who had seen at
lease one parent have more than
two or three dnnks at a sitting, 16
percent had used lsd more than
twice. Only 7 per cent of those
who had seen a parent drink less
than two or three drinks at a time
used lsd.
Use of tranQuilizers or sleeping
:ills by parents also significantly
increased the chances that the
student was a drug user according
to the survey. Evon parental
smoking is linked to student drug
use. although to a lesser degree.
Parental fighting. separation and
divorse. on the o ther hand.
showed relatively weak
correlations.
The strongest cor re lation
revealed by the survey. however.
was the use of maijuana by 70 per
cent or the students whose long­time
friends were users too. Only
6 per cent of the students whose
friends were not users smoked
marijuana. A strong correlation
was also found between friends·
use of lsd and the respondent's
use.
' Report any problem or
suspicious incident immediately.
Report any questionable people in
the tunnel or elsewhere. Don' t
hitchhike. lock rooms when you
leave them - $200 has been
stolen this year. Don't flaunt your
valuables. Lock cars. College
campuses generally have always
been prime sites for thieves to
steal and also drop off stolen cars.
Don' t sleep in cars. Dorm students
should draw their window drapes
at night. Check the lost and found
office in the security of'fice when
you·ve misplaced an article.·
Mr pohl asked us to stress that
any student can depend on the
Fake Marijuana
What do you do with a 21 inch
high lifelike reproduction or
a real marijuana plant that
costs you 2 bucks? Well. let
us tell you what the American
Civil l iberties Union is doing
with the profits from each
sale.
Every penny ol profits helps
lund the Marijuapa Civil
liberties Project, a coordi­nated
national effort which is
now working to legally con­test
unconstitutional mari·
juana laws, legally defend
people lacing prison and jail
terms under such laws, and
appeal case• to :,igher courtt
For tust $2.00 (and that I~
eludes postage) you'll not
only be getting a good-lookinc
pl•stic grass plant, in nalurol
shades of green, but youl
also be helping to prote<l
your brothers, your sisten
and maybe even yourself frora.
repressive laws and unjusl
imprisonment.
With A Real Purpos
::~n r! $2.00tG : '•'IINSrO:t-~ SMJ":,: ~0~ . :r1 ::-.tr,
P.o. eox Iloso
tier•'• mPyH bILrAu. d. :PA . !91 0 ! L----'0'--- --of•nu..
-add-ru-·--:=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-~"; ========= We must h•"• vou1 t iP to se.nd your stuH.
Appalachian
Experience
annemarie vorras1
The sociology department is
considering participation in an
appalachian program. This
program is similar to the one
inaugurated at st. john fisher two
years ago.
The purpose of this program is
to introduce students to the life
ways of the impoverished by
actually Jiving with a family in
appalachia.
The program is tentatively
scheduled for this january and will
last about rhr-ee weeks. Provisions
will be made in order fOf students
to take their final exams before
the excursion. If the program
becomes permanent in the
curriculum. a student can earn 3
to 6 credits. (There is a POSsiblity
that students involved in this
experiment a l appalachian
program this january can also earn
these credits. Also. the possible
ume for the program - january
- would fit in nicely with the 4- 1-
4 calender, if that is ever initiated
at the college.
To participate in this program
the student must pay a
registration fee and for his room
and board. The sodal experience
of this appalachian visit will far
outweigh the financial cost.
Anyone in terested in this
program and wishing further
information about it. can contact
Student
only:
It
Pays to
Advertise
CLASSIFIED
S.ll it arrd/or firrd itt~
us in 01
ClASSIFIED ADS
Simply lilt out your ad in
space provided, clip, and seal
each additonal word.
Ad as you want it publi
(please print) ......... . ..
No. issues you want ad
in .... .. .... .
No. words per issue . .. •••• .
Total cost per issue
(minimum $ .50) ....... ..
Total cost for entire run .. .
Plea• be ture payment
Danieo all Clauifiods .
eaner 1
4-1-4
Issue Reviewed
the administration. facuhy & students of nazareth college of
hoc committee on calendar revision - sr. marie augustine.
mr. bergh. mr. brindle. miss caffarelh, St. eileen conheadv.
sr. josepha kennedy. miss laporte. dr. regensueif, miss
sfeyman
report of che ad hoc commitee on calendar revision to the
college of rochester community regarding revi sion for the
2 academic year. The committee presents for community
three possible calendars: two 4· 1·4 calendars and one 'early
end' two semester calendar. Some of the advantages and
of 1he 4- 1·4. 1he major problems wilh 1he 'early fall -
spring calendar. and the recommendation of the committee follow.
4·1 ·4 CALENDARS
1971-The same for bolh Calendar I and Calendar II
Tue. Sept. 7 Registration
Wed. Sep1. 8 First Day of Classes
Mon. Oct. 1 1 -12 Long Fall Weekend
Wed. OcL 13 Classes resume
Wed. Nov. 24-26 Thanksgiving Recess
Mon. Nov. 29 Classes resume
Fri. Dec. 10 Lasr Day of classes
Mon Oec. 13·18 Examinations: end of semester
days)
Organization
Four week Interim Term
For 1971 • 72 Since lhe Sullelln for 1971 • 72 musl go 10 1he
by 12 / 1/70. 11 will be impossible 10 implemenlany changes in
curriculum fot the regular semesters or to list specific interim
Possible solution: Make use of NY. Stale College
Exams; use already scheduled and approved departmental
n t study courses and expand on these: or inlt iate
projects at Departments' options until Curriculum
Registration
Classes begin
Spring Vacation •
Classes resume
Last Oay of classes
Final examinations
Commencement
CALENDAR II- NORMAL
GR)!J.DUATION DATE
Spring Semester 1972
Mon. Feb. 14
Tue. Feb. 15
Thur. Mar. 30-Apr. 7
Mon. Apr. 10
Fri. May 19
Mon. May 22-26
Sun. May28
162 class days)
All dates above are inclust've
Spnng vacat1on schedules include Easter. wh1ch in 1972 falls on
April 2 Where Easter falls outs1de spring vacation, it is
that thiS be compressed to two weekends and the
week, and 1ha1 Holy Thursday and Good Friday become
T_his would not change number class
DISCUSSION OF 4 · 1-4
Advantages:
Permits a reduction in the number o f courses: students can concentrate
on 4 instead of 5: faculty preparation burdens are ultimately no greater;.
elimmates lame·duck session; makes possible work-study experience.
where 1his •s desirable: allows for greater creativity and curriculum
flexibility, e.g. interdisctplinary; may allow some faculty free time at
irregular intervals during Interim: early ca lendar allows students
advantages in employment; vacations are between terms: makes
possible more effective schedultng; e.g. blocks of time may benefit
studio or laboratory courses; curricu lum may be broadened: possible
advantages .toadmissions office in recruitment; decided advantages to
education deparrmenr. over half of l he senior class las1 year. 156/ 226.
practice teaching without mid-year break.
Disadvantages:
Unequal intersess1on d•stdbution of projects among departments:
mistakes attendant on any experiment Of new program - some
innovations are not benef•c•al; greater admini strative difficulties:
possible difficulty in shilling to "double-SPeed:" problems of 'course
equivalence:· faculty vacations diminished since work·load of end of
term comes at intersession and vacation time: some department'
offerings seem not as well suited to interim courses as others: part-time
staff may be unable to be 'fuU-time· during this period: problems of
'resuming' effectively before labor Day.
The 4 -1 ·4 COST factor
4-1 ·4 would cost more than the present non-standard calendar (a very
rough f•gure of $20.000 10 $30.000 increased cos1 has been
estima1edl: SAGA is a fixed contrac1 so 1ha1 closing 1he residence halls
for a longer period {during January interim term) would not save much,
if any, labor but could save some food cost; conversely. leaving some of·
the residence halls open in January might not add unreasonable
addi tional cost to the present library hours would increase overall cost:
maintenance of buildings per se. and that if 4-1 -4 or any innovative
program helped attract more high quality students or reduced
withdrawals, the extra cost of 4 · 1-4 could be quickly offset if not prove
to be a profitable investment lnstructinal costs are another matter. and
1t w ould be up to the faculty to min1mize if not obviate extta costs for
teaching contracts if 4-1 -4 •s to be a viable proposal.
CALENDAR 111-"EARLY FALL· EARLY SPRING" 2 Semesler Calendar
Fall Semester 1971
Mon. Aug. 30 Regisrration
Tue. Aug. 31 Classes Begin
Mon. DeL 11 · 12 Long Weekend
Wed. Nov. 24-26 Thanksgi ving Recess
Thur. Mar. 30·Apr. 7 Spring Vacation
Fri. Dec. 1 7 Las1 day of classes
Mon. Dec. 20·24 Exams: end of
semester
Commencement
(74 class days)
Tue. Jan. 18
Wed. Jan. 19
Mon. Feb. 21 ·22
Fri. May 12
Mon. May 15·19
Sun. May 21
(74 closs days)
All dBtessbove are inclusive
Advtmtages: Exams over before Christmas: no Lame-Ouck classes: our
early in May for Job market; long between-semester vacation an
advantage to some.
Disadvantages: Faculty in before l abor Day; l onger semesters due to
lack of mini-lerm (lechnically lhe 1970· 71 calendar is 100 short); no
room for real experimentation due to lack of mini· term: serious problem
with student teaching affecting over 50% senior class.
COMMITIEE RECOMMENDATION
The Ad Hoc Committee on Calendar Revision unanimously
recommends to the Nazareth College o f Rochester community the
adoplion of the early gradua&on 4-1 -4 calendar (Calendar I on 1he
above listt 1
Motion to be enrered ot Faculty Meeting November 10. 1970 and voted
on at next meeting.
BE IT MOVED THAT:
The facully of NaUJreth College of Rochesrer adopl the early gradualion
4-1 ·4 cafendar as recommended by the Ad Hoc Committee on Calendar
Revision. effective for the academic year 1971-7 2
Hearings: On Tues.. Nov. 17 and Thur. Nov. 19 the Comm1ttee on
Calendar Revtston w1ll hold open heanng 1n the Art Cent.er AuditOt'tum
These hearing Will be held from 1 1 :30· 1:20 p.m. bo1h days and are
epen to the emire Nazareth College of Rochester Community. The
committee wi ll act as a panel. 10 explain the proposal in delail and
answer any questions Prepared Questions and statements -are
welcome. and of course questions from the Hoor will also be answered.
Information remains on Library Reserve.
Vote: On December 8. 1970 there wi ll be a faculty meetjng to vote on
the Calendar Committee·s motion. There will be a student referendum
at about the same time
to nazareth
community:
as a re s ult of
student vote the tunnels
will be an outlet for self-expression
- the votes
were a s follows
83 for # 1 - one
structured design
provided by a
winner
of a contest.
265 for #2 - free
self expression
26 for #3
a s is
for none of
the above
8 25 students ca red
not to concern them-se
lves though the op­portunit
y was open to
them ..
self e xpression must
not get out of hand -
the tunnels will reflect
us a s a whole ...
Thank you
The
International
Scene
. .. A coming series
in gleaner . ..
Would'anyone who
has studied or worked
abroad please contact
Betsy Crane at 473-
7328 or leave name in
gleaner office.
gleaner _ s
october 23, 1970 4 2 A !J lAST AVE,
ROCH£1TIR. N. Y, 14818
"AND THERE WAS LIGHT"
JEWISH COMMUNITY BOOK FAIR
Sponsored by the Jewish Young Men's & Women's Association
in cooperation with other Jewish Organizations
SUNDAY, NOV. 15 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 1970
AT
TeDtple Beth El
139Winton RoadS. Rochester. N .Y.
ADM I S S I 0 N F R E E (unless otherwise noted)
R.I.T. Centra Invites Girls of Nazareth
to Carol's Birthday Party
featuring Mars St. Miller
(formerly Lincoln Zepher)
.. · R.I.T. ·College Union Cafeteria
Saturday, Nov. 14 9:00·1:00 ••
Tom Collins and Whiskey Sours
available at nominal cost
NO
admission charge

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Transcript

NAZAAETJ.I COLLEGE OF AOCNESTER ..
Coffee Hour
nswers 8t Questions
rosa nne costa
those students parUCIPBt•ng '" continuing
Sister barbara
of contmuing education. organized the event to provide the
1
An tnformal question and answer penod covered such top1cs as
studyu>g. and general onlormatoon Students should seek
when needed. from their departmenl head Of from saster
book how to stucly in college IS QUill belpful lor those
... 'II Clolhculty studyong and wnung term papers
reasons we"' goven by tt>e women as to why tl>ey decoded
the1r education after a lapse of ume even though reponStb•htle$
obhgat1ons had but It up Ann Oemocker. mother of Stx and a
student. stated that her goal IS to help d•sturbed and retarded
who can not read Her own son suffers hom dyslexta.
jnformation bulletin board for the continuing educa tion
wi ll be going up soon ou tside of sister barbara's office
us on Pi Gamma Mu
pat willlama
ts bemg apphed to her
fordham university m
city. In a letter to pi
the past president
other members to
scholarship.
mu tS the national
society of soesal sciences.
ed 10 each chapter are
htSIOfY poht1cal le180C. SOCIOlogy
end econotrues maJOfS who have
m&1n111ned at least a B average.
The moderetor of nazareth·s
chapter IS dr. mary bush On our
campus. thiS orgamzauon has
sponsored speakers who are
concerned w i th the soc1al
sciences. tn an a ttempt to
encourage interest and study in
these loelds Recently. po gamrnu
mu parhCIP&ted tn the u n, day at
nazareth's art center
Who's Who
Honors
Students
A number or students have
been selected lor membershop in
the organization of who's who m
american colleges and
univerSities Although standards
for selection vary from school to
school there are four bas1c
requ~remen ts for membersh1p·
character. scholarship leadershtp
10 extracurriCUlar activit•es. and
posS~blliry or future usefulness to
business and to SOClOty
The lollowrng students have
been selected from nazareth
coHege
Mnior•
ann callaghan
kathy chrostopher
kathleen c1ma
marye e.rane
theresa deforrest
salley dylewskl
barbara gonzalez
margaret hammond
catherine herman
marilyn kndnck
shirley Iapiana
melinda marley
Joanne rao
martha nley
eltzabeth slayne
elrzabeth S4111eau
angela :zammlt
junior•
lois blowers
mary beth farrel
mary ann harlnen
iacquehne robot11
christine russo
President Names
Department Head
One ol New YCle
coverage extends from 6 00 p m
to 6.00 am Tt>ere are always two
guards on duty one 1n the deotm
complex and the other 1n the
patrol car.
The mam secunty tS located 1n
kearney The rad1o IS there as •s
the guard station Mrs
champagne can usually be callod
10 case of emergency. There Is
also a rad1o 1n the faculty house
and the ans oemer
Our next mee t ing was
highlighted by the onouaung ol
action on the SOPhomore curfew
friday novombe<13
proposal. But. before thiS was
undertaken regular buSiness was
teken care of.
Wu\9 rep elecuons '" ell the
permanent hous1ng has been
undertaken. Hopefulty. an acuve
charn of commun•cat•ons Will be
started 10 che d 5
F,.ohman midterm grade reporu will be mailed by friday.
november 13.
friday november 20
Laat day to withdraw from a courM without grade .. F ...
thruaday november 19
friday november 20
Thankagivlr>g examo. Conault official bulletin boardl for tlmaa
androomo.
tueaday november 24
Thankaglvir>g receaa baglno alter laat class and laborate>tnt on the part of the
edttOf or posSibly one coukS look even further to the subject mauer
whtch should be ""ed•tortahzed" upon. The fut•hty of putting one's
observations on the line could also add to the editorial burden. yet one
must forge on - or so I am told
If we could nol cast our minds back to the first editOfial of thtS
academtc year. i asked that we an take cogntzanee of 1he system of a
untversuy· type atmosphere modeled on newman's d•seotuse. the theme
of whteh centered around a total concern for the dtscovery and
eoncomttant culbvauon of truth
In vtew of this may , ask now wtth a ttnge o f ' natve tnnoeence' what
possesses more truth ahan the human body? Whether it be •n the
contex t of biology or art It Still comes out the same and our merely
mov1ng It from places of VI SO a I prominence will fell to change iL
FO< you see rllar os rile real beaury or 1ru1h - it may be our or Sigh!
but H sullas not out of mtnd
kmd
THE PROBlEM OF REBElliON
There is somerhing abourbeong a rebel during rhe 1970's thar doesn'r
lit The momenr you decide 10 chu ck !he old order and starrro rhink and
act on your own. you are not on your own Instead you are a member of
!hal large auronomous group known as !he rebels. Regardless ol
whether you QUI! !he OSiabhshmen! bec.ause Ol a deeprOOied halted Ol
apple poe. Of agnew. the dral~ Of bog lamohes you are ommedoately typed
rebel - by rhose mySteiiOUS beongs who do such categonzong - and
forced to enter the rebel mold. You who wtshed to do your own
thinktng, are presentod with a set of slogans to mouth - it doesn' t
mauer 1f vou agree with them. so long as you should them loudly
enough - and geslures 10 wave. and hairstyles ro lollow. And you 'd
better shape-m fast. blend tn with all the other rebels. or you are 10
.uouble If chey ccnch you not shOuting enougn, or watching tne wrong
televJStOn shows - or wo..-se yet readtng a non·reQuned book. you are
labeled reactionary and tucked on your private arse back to the
establishment And even there. tdeahsm bleodtng in an mfinte vanetv of
places, you are labeled oven more and forced to conform,
Strange isn't it? You can't even rebel. but you are part of someone
else's rebellion. Thos seems 10 be an age that condemns !he ondovodual
1nd fOf'ces conform1ng; even tn that once sacred bastion of the: different
and the Odd - rebelloon As Tom Woll so nghdy stated in hos electric
kool-<>id acid t est. "You are enher on !he bus Of off the bus.' Isn't It a
pity there are so few buses left for us to choose from
The Green Phan tom
Letters
to the
editor:
Dear ed1tor.
Has anyone noticed the
dlscrepanc1es over admJOtStrat•ve
polocoes lately. the lack or
c~rauon and red taoe creating
a never end1ng battle bt\ween
concerned. alarmed, and at ttmes
even hosnle students and people
' lighten up?' Whenever the
quesuons of outmoded traditions,
residant ltvtng and commuters
r1ghts and needs. academ1c
IrrelevanCieS. the: assumption of
1nd1V1dual respons.belttees. conuol
of power. etc .• etc etc . are
ra1sed. thts 1s unavoidably obv1ous
Would it. perhaps. be more
accurate to refer to nazareth
college as naureth academy
State II?
Let me ask one quesuon If
nazateth as an 1nsutunon of hagher
leerntng and we are maturtng
young women. then why 11 the
I'IV4t01tll JUtirut1A ,_, n"7"'"'h nnr
hoki so flfmty to their authontatiVe
roles rtther than try to work
together wnh students for a
grourer end? Do you . the
adm101Sttat1on. honestly behave
that blond lanh and obedoence woll
wOki~•olv beautiful. as well.
may find the exotic
of tropical i slands. the
verve of spani sh
erers. the ori enta l
~~~~,istication of the sloe: eyed
·~lldo··arabian fantasies and the sun·
splendor of ferti le land.
new sounds emanate
other native crafts and customs
h ave been p-ainsta k i ngl y
researched by the bayanihan folk
arts center using the staff and
facHities of the phil i ppine
women's university. The center
was created as a non·profit. civic
group with the dual purpose of
research and presentations.
Teams of students and teachers
were sent to all parts of the
coun try to tape · r ecord .
photograph and learn dances. to
collect authenttc costumes and
musical ins'truments and to bnng
all the research together into a
permanent collection. Female
dancers are students at the
university. Male dancers were
recruited from other universi ties
and from public life.
Bayanihan. a tagalog word
meaning an ancient custom of
working together. i s taken
seriously by the members of the
company. One man•festation of
'If
music
be
the
food
of
love
on;'
play
(Twelfth Night
Act 1: Scene I
the seriousness wjth which they
rake their work is the fact that
there are no stars and no star
billing in the company. All dancers
and musicians are listed equally in
all programs and playbills. The
standard answer to the question:
"who is the star or premiere
dancer& is 'bayanihan is the star.'
The bayanihan company. highly
acclaimed throughout the world.
performed before pres.ident nixon
when he recently visited president
and mrs . marcos i n t he
philippines. The highlight of their
current us tour will include a two~
week engagement at new york's
alice tu lly hall during the
christmas holidays.
Tickets for bayanihan philippine
dance company. priced at $5.00.
are on sale at the ar ts center
boxoffice. The boxoffice is open
weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m
Mail order mformation can be
obtained by calling 586·2420.
Audience Hails Fialka
Recently, an aging clown reured from the circus and was interviewed
on CBS Asked if hos profession differed g•ea tly from when he storied.
thO man shook h1s head sadly saying. 'Yes - no one laughs anym01e.
It's hard 10 make people laugh when they have problems:
Fialka. the brilliant Czech mime. incorporates such problems in a
whimsical. chaplinesque view of man vs. machine With the assistance
of his theatre of the balustrade. graduates of the prague school of
danes, fialka manages to conceive every absurd suuggle in which we
daily engage. with our pathetic notion of the convenience of
industrialization. No invention can alleviate our desperately lonely
condition No device in the depersonalized mdust11af society we live in
can arti culate that wodd of loneliness. So fialka and his players resort to
the gestures so universal in nature. Buttons won't button: ears won't
start. doors won't open. Fialka does not indict anyone to make social
comment. we aU share the blame and the resulting diseomfort.
Fialka relies on movement to demonstrate ingenuity and originality.
His technique is flawless. Moreover. his personality creates an empathy
that draws the audience to his revelations. His regard for the audience ..
as participants is always evident. He employs the familiar outside coat.
umbrella and mime make·up. bu t his troupers become cars. mach~nes
and revolving doors.
When marceau came to
nazareth. he described the
problem facing the mime dur to
the fact that the s1age in the arts
center has a personality of i ts own
that can take away from the total
effect But like marceau. fialka
over came that problem in his
dynamism and rappott.
And the audience in Rochester
paid F ial k a the highes t
compliment - they laughed.
Naz-Fisher
film series
Wednesday,
Nov. 18
HENRYV
lFisher B-J 35
" speaking powerfully o
I• • II a 1enat1on ...
(Sat. Review)
lngmar Bergman's
The Ritual
Arts Center
Film Series
Wed., Thurs., Sat.
Sun.
November 25, 26,
28, 29
8:00p.m.
gleaner
november 13, 1970
4 Emphasis
on
German
Culture.
Drama Club
presents Woyzeck
patrice pallone
T on•ght matks the open•ng of the nazareth - st. john fisher drama
club season m conjunction with the natareth thealre department. m a
performance or george buchners woyzeck. in the art centet auditorium.
As part or nazareth's focus on german culture. the production will be
repeated november 14, 15, 18 and 19 at 8: 15p.m. Following the,
november 18 performance, an onstage discussion will be held. with the
performers and production staff available to answer questions from the
audience.
This early nineteenth century tragedy depicts the life of a man whose
social circumstances eventua lly lead to his downfall. Woyzeck displays
the quest of a young man faced with the 1mages of man's beasttmess
and nature's cwelty. It has been called a ' p1cture of human suffering in
existenual tsolauon' and IS espectally modern m its psychology.
Accordmg to d~rector joseph
baranowskt, the main character.
wovzeck.. IS a pnmuive 'mcapable
of the sublettes '" ph1losophy and
science · As compared co
shakespeare·s 'othello: he can
only act He cannot 'think' or
rcuionaltte
In regard to general production
concep1s. tt should be noted that
the set emphasizes an 'organic
quality.' Since woyzeck must be
isola ted in a world apart he never
speaks directly to the audience.
Mr baranowski pointed ou t that in
planntng the product•on
nazareth's thrust stage presented
a definue problem m that it does
not permit a separate e n v~ron·
mont.'
The play tS taken from an actual
occurrance In l iepz.ig. when a
johann chriS t ian woyzock
murdered h1s m1stress. However.
at the t rtal woyzeck was
conSidered competent. and thus
executed. The quest10n of
woyzeck's responsibility for his
actions provides the background
for buchner's play
The large cast 1s headed by ric
peterson In the title role with Irene
Iamberti and teuy ging as marie
and 1hc drum major. rcspecnvely.
Work ing with arts cen ter
d•rector baranowski is technical
director william fletcher. also a
member of the theatre arts
faculty.
Tickets are ava1table at the
nazareth arts center box office
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. monday
through friday, Student tickets
may be secured upon presentation
WATCH
FOR
Student
Recitals
Coming
In
Nov.-Dec
Visit
gleaner
office-see
the
hanging
of
BOB
DYLAN
Eastman Slates
'War Requiem'
Sunday even•ng. november 15. at 8: 15 p.m. tn the eastman lhea•
the roch'ester oratorio soc1ety will inaugurate Its twenly·s•xth sea
with a performance of benjamin bntten's 'war requiem: Theodot
hoUenbach. founder and music director of 1he group. will condutt 11-.
composition which author atthur cohn has called ·an antiwar manifesa
of overwhelming power ·
Benjamin britten was born november 22. 19 13 in lowestoft. englarw!
In addiuon to his repuration as a composer of classical music. he is alt
known as a conductor and accompanist I c was he who conducted ~
first pe,.formance of the ·war HlQutem· may 30. 1962 at coventry E ·
le1nsdorf conducted the boston symphony orchestra •n the amerJCII
prem1ere july 27. 1963 at the tanglewood mus•c feStival.
\
Wrnten in celebrauon of the
consecration of the new st
m•chael's cathedral at coventry
(the original chu rch had been
destroyed during the second
world war}, the 'war requiem'
makes use not o n ly o f the
traditional 'missa pro defunctis'
used by palestralna. lassus.
victoria. mozart and verdi but also
of 9 of witfred owen's anti· war
poems. Owen was a poet serving
in the british Bfmy who was killed
one week before the end of the
f1tst world war.
The 'war requiem' calls for
soprano. tenor and baritone
soloi srs. mixed choru s. boys
chorus. and orchestra with an
expanded percusston section
including: tambourine. triangle.
cymbals. castenets. whip. chinese
blocks, gong. bells In c fi !·sharp.
vibraphon e. g lockenspiel and
antique cymbals.
Britten has said that it is the
duty of the composer ·to speak to
or for h•s fellow human be~ngs.'
Come suntiay and listen h e's
SPeaking to you.
We're you given
a piece of
white paper?
if you remember
or are curious
come to room
1 54 in the Arts
Centre nov. 19
at 1:30
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Civak reports:
day evening m medatlle
we held our first offJctalget
r especially arranged for
tshmen and sophomores for
rpose of famthanz•ng them
class and school
nattives and starttng off
ar's coffee hours and ge&
rSahead.
stmply beauttful voice of
peploe started o ff t ho
ng; she did a few of her
It folk selections and dod a
• thank you judy
uoductions followed .
mty affa•rs representatives
nd meg walters and hz
s. freshman reps hnda
y sophomore rep and chns
and jeann•e sauer juntor
representa tives. Miss d•ana
director of student ac11vi1ies
veral members of studont
11 were introduced and
to say a few words A
y doseussion followed from
whech • hope g•ves some
oon of future 'raps· whtCh
I should be held regularly
of counctl and community
" representat ives w ore
ed out together w • th a
onna ~re which we hoped
lead to dtscuss•ons among
s and opimons as well as
st1ons for what people
bke seen done
ld flke to emphasrze tho
nance of th ese
naires. being that coffee
hour talks. soc1a l events. ecc
should be relevant and we want to
bnng ou t issues wh1ch concern a
m8joroty of people. so please offer
suggesnons as to ava•lable (7)
1nformanve speakers. top•cs. and
arrangements h1me. place. etc I
Commun•catlon has been
slightly weak but os beong
remedied but we do need your
help in spreading the work. Please
offer suggestions and watch for
bulletins.
The united nauons heartng
which took plaoe october 26th In
the ans center audltonum was
cord•afly welcomed by a number
of our g•rls who donated the•r
servtees as pages. reg•strars. and
ushers Senator cooper and hts
committee members along with
miss edwina hogadono. dean of
r i t., and sister theresa w ere
grateful for a job well done Thank
you girls.
Halloween was a time for
parnes: the boys ond g~ls of the
rochester state hOSPital and
montgomery settlement house
jOined us for a festive get together
in kearney poplars loungs
A few more th•ngs - anyone
notice the super·enormous truck
outstde the back of kearney
saturday afternoon? It was mike
ryan and jimmy bm'\g1ng 1n some
clothes and furntture that naz and
f•sher students have been
collecting Now we lUSt need to
move rt all out to the m•grant
camps before they move me out
of nazareth!
gleaner calendar
event where
jethro tull war memorla18:30
woyzeck art center 8 15
sen1or recual a·134pm
Justrne casey
royal hp1uan horses war memonal8 30
muSic department a- 13
henry v fosher f>. 135
beethoven·vlohn lower aud 4 p m,
sonatas
' traffic' war memorool 8 30
grateful doad u ofr
travelogue art center 8 p m
Jefferson a~rplane mcc
up the downstairs fisher b-135 S 55
case
globetrotters warmemonal
rochester chamber art center 4 p m
orchestra
semor recital a-13
jimdekoma
phol bertrand
notse dame glee club wheatlon·chll• hs
S2508pm
bergman's utual art center 8 p m
ouess who war memOflll 8 30
The flfst sem•nar or the year
was held october I 6· 18 and was
.a fantast iC success. but the
sem•nar for last weekend was
cancelled I 3 boys and 4
girls. coma on g~rlsl I know we
had a lot of work to do. Next time.
Meoungs. poster·making,
chasing after c•der and donuts,
getung permiSSIOn dittoing.
wtalkeng have kept us
runnmg Here are a few th1ngs for
anyone Interested
Volunteer programs check the
bulle tons by the sandwoeh machone
and m smyth basement
Religious affaors lather
shannon 1s always eager f,or new
members f o r tho liturgy
commmee: have any bright ideas
for dorm masses eeumen•cal
and/ or ·new· serv•ees? (coffee
hours) contact cheresa m1ller.
kearney t east 01 me
Drug counseling sandy Ieboid
together w 1th members of
admmistrat1on and students are
organit1ng programs to run from
late november/ early december.
Sh e w i l l gladly ac c ept
suggestions. comments and help
from you so that tt will be
informative. realis tic. and
beneficral h w•ll be earned on
ttvough personal counseling as
well.
Personal counseling several
people have 1nformed me or
friends chat they would be more
than happy to counsel students on
personal problems of any kind.
Please feel free to speak with
sandy Ieboid. o ld o'connor;
roseanne ISabell. kearney; mr
kolb. of the theatre arts faculty.
arts center - downstans: peg
morgan. meda1lle and myself.
paula et'V1ok.
tllank you.
was alSo given to each dorm
studenl to get the student opinion
on the proposed system.
The next order of business was
the heshman·sophomore curfew
proposal beong submined lor 1101e
10 re-SJdent council It wes read to
the counc•l members and after
much debate the proposal was
accepted by resrdenoe couneol by
a vote of 10. 1 Before the
proposal can be submttted to
administrative counc1l a student
vote must be taken and a letter
must be sent to the parents for
approval
The next meet1ng began wuh a
treasurers repon that our treasury
now contaons S424 31
Mary betll farrell then gave a
report on the act•on tlken on the
curfew proposal She reporced
that the dtttos were run off for the
dorm meetings where vote Wtll be
taken
Commtttee reports were made
wuh no further achon in them
except che telev•~on commmee
headed by mary ann pratt She
mvesngated the costs of rentmg a
tv as proposed by m1ss Iauria
More 1nvestJgat.eon must be made
befote further actton can be taken.
Diseuss1on was made on the
formatJon of house governments.
M iss d•ana lauuo read examples of
how they wero set up at other
colleges. Further d1scussion will
be made at the next meetong Any
sugges11ons or comments are
wetcome -our meet•ngs are held
every monday at 6 30 p m on our
mP.daiiiP. hlll~m,.ant nff,,.•
EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
thursday, november 19, I 970
eco 405
HIS 401 (PSC 401)
MUS211
lhursday, november 19, 1970
MISS fake
mr mou1s
dr gruber
810 455 sr grace
BUS 457 moss fake
HIS 455 sr. ooleen
SPC 468 moss delvecclloo
thursday. november 19, 1970
MTH 417 sr. barbara ann
friday, november 20, 19'70
EOU 405 dr barraco
9:00a.m.
s 129
13
A 183
1:30p.m.
S206
S206
S219
A 183
7:00p.m.
A 186
9:00a.m.
A 13
Alcohol on Campus?
The undergrad assoerauon Is formeng a student comm1ttee 10
1nvest•gare the schoors sooal regulatiOn about alcohol on campus
Accordong to the student handbook " alcoholoc beverages may not be
consumed en -nd1v.dual resadence hall rooms. Only wnh the e;cpltett
permiSSion of che dean of students may elcohohc beverages be served
1n pubhc rooms of the res1dence halls or a1 soc1al gatherings elsewhere
on campus."
II you thonk this rule should be changed or just want to know why it's
there. here's your chance to do somoth1ng about it. Contact Ioyce
cafarello (carrot hall). rory finnerty (old o'connor 2 I 4). or your class reps.
Remember, the bestway to get eornothing done io to do it
yaurHif.
annette sleymon
Hnior dan rep
l A.O! ArAitTMfNT OEVfLOP­mvnt
has huge surplus of new
rug1 all 100 per ''"' nylon, f ull
sin 9.12. $24. 12•15, $39.
Gold, green, blue , red . Trt•
mtndo•a savings. Great for
apartment. Selling fvrniture,
con pu"how opar1ment or in.
dividvol pieces ot tremendous
savings. New. Selling e very­thing.
For Information please
call S~o~itland ManCM Apartments
Warthoun. 377·4 1 15, be tween
12·9p.m.
Library note:
chi che' pu yen,
yen che' pu chi.
- lao-Tz_e, Too-ten-king.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Oeterminea That
Cigarette Smoking is Oangarous to Your Health.
By Act of Congress. I he
above warning must be placed on all
cigareues manufactured for sale
in the United States on or after
November 1, 1970.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.
EOUCA TION. AND WELFARE
Pl.lbltc Ktt11ft Ser. ce
gleaner 6
november 13, 1970
Interview:
Security Head
Introduced
If the college community at Nazareth has sensed changes in the
faces. procedures and professional image of the security departmem
th1s fall. those changes can be attributed to a large extent to our new
director of security. mr. allan pohl.
Mr. pohl formerly managed the rochester office of pinkenon. inc. and
served as director of securhy at the university of rochester and strong
memorial hospital
The new nazareth security chief joined pinkerton·s security and
Investigative firm in 1964. After several promotions. he was appointed
head of the buffalo office investigation department and in july 1969
took charge of rochester area operations. His duties in the buffalo and
roches1er areas included overall responsibili ty for the security of several
colleges in new york and pennsylvania. including nazareth. On
september 10. he moved into his new office at nazarerh to assume fulf ..
ume responsibility for all security on the campus.
A narive of tonawanda. new york. mr. pohl received his bachelors
degree from the state university at buffalo where he also took graduate
studies. Before ioining pinkerton·s. he taught at a junior high school in
north tonawanda and was a radio-televi sion announcer in buffalo.
Allan Pohl
What are some of his thoughts
on security at natareth?
We have a community set-up
here at nazareth. ' explains mr.
pohf. ·The campus is a city unto
itself - i t has i ts own store.
dining areas. recreational facilities
and livtng Quarters. ConseQuently.
such an area must have its own
police force. Our men must be
capable of handling a diversity of
situations. Moreover. we must act
In a public relations capacity as
well. Daily visitors - salesmen,
VI Ps. pare"ts, delivery men,
officials - meet the security staff
before gaining any other
impression of the school. Our staff
must be able to relate to all forces
wtthin the community at
nazareth.'
Her e the intervtew was
interrupted. A semor w•th a stalled
car wondered rf anyone at the
security office had a jumper calbe
Mr. pohl dispatched one ol the
'guard. · We aren' t guarding
anyone here. Our function is
preventive security. Obviously. our
staff deals with problems that
arise. but we consider our main
function to be preventi ng
problems from developing.·
·we are making changes to
facilitate matters. Our staH mu~t
be Interchangeable. able to
perform a vanety of duties. We are
acQuiring a new patrol car and
equipment. We are changing the
shirts on the uniforms to a lighter.
more attractive color. Our men
attend uaining sessions on their
own rime in such areas as first~
aid. penal taw. self-defense and
public realtions.·
Such changes may seem minor.
But the person entering this very
open campus should realtze at
sight that he ,s dealing with a
competent staff.·
M r. pohl was asked hoV.:
students might assist the stall. He
........ ..; .......... 1 .. u ..... : ....................... : ....... .
Drug Use
Surveyed
High s.:hool students who have
seen their mothers Intoxicated
have a significant ly greater
tendency to be drug users than
those who have not.
Th1s is one of the conclusions
reached in a survey published in
octobe r 's sci en ce d igest
conducted by two po rt
washington. n.y .. high school
students among 1.416 of their
classmates.
The 47 Question comput er­aided
survey was made under
faculty supervision by james
valleman. 1 7. and theodore
lawrence, 18. seniors at schreiber
high s.:hool. port washington.
Specifically. the survey shows
that 44 per cent of the students
who had observed their mothers
under the inf luence of liQuor had
smoked marijuana three times or
more.
Only 27 per cent of those who
had never seen th eir mothers
drunk smoked marijuana three
times or more.
Of students who had seen at
lease one parent have more than
two or three dnnks at a sitting, 16
percent had used lsd more than
twice. Only 7 per cent of those
who had seen a parent drink less
than two or three drinks at a time
used lsd.
Use of tranQuilizers or sleeping
:ills by parents also significantly
increased the chances that the
student was a drug user according
to the survey. Evon parental
smoking is linked to student drug
use. although to a lesser degree.
Parental fighting. separation and
divorse. on the o ther hand.
showed relatively weak
correlations.
The strongest cor re lation
revealed by the survey. however.
was the use of maijuana by 70 per
cent or the students whose long­time
friends were users too. Only
6 per cent of the students whose
friends were not users smoked
marijuana. A strong correlation
was also found between friends·
use of lsd and the respondent's
use.
' Report any problem or
suspicious incident immediately.
Report any questionable people in
the tunnel or elsewhere. Don' t
hitchhike. lock rooms when you
leave them - $200 has been
stolen this year. Don't flaunt your
valuables. Lock cars. College
campuses generally have always
been prime sites for thieves to
steal and also drop off stolen cars.
Don' t sleep in cars. Dorm students
should draw their window drapes
at night. Check the lost and found
office in the security of'fice when
you·ve misplaced an article.·
Mr pohl asked us to stress that
any student can depend on the
Fake Marijuana
What do you do with a 21 inch
high lifelike reproduction or
a real marijuana plant that
costs you 2 bucks? Well. let
us tell you what the American
Civil l iberties Union is doing
with the profits from each
sale.
Every penny ol profits helps
lund the Marijuapa Civil
liberties Project, a coordi­nated
national effort which is
now working to legally con­test
unconstitutional mari·
juana laws, legally defend
people lacing prison and jail
terms under such laws, and
appeal case• to :,igher courtt
For tust $2.00 (and that I~
eludes postage) you'll not
only be getting a good-lookinc
pl•stic grass plant, in nalurol
shades of green, but youl
also be helping to prote